CDCs Numbers Collapse Under Weight 
            of New Study
Analysis finds estimates of obesity deaths 
            14 times higher than reality. Center for Disease Control vows not to 
            promote fact that obesity is much less of a danger.
     Two big news stories left the food 
            police frustrated in their battle to promote the nations obesity 
            epidemic. The governments replacement for the food pyramid wasnt 
            anti-industry enough to satisfy some critics. Those new diet 
            guidelines showed up the same day the Centers for Disease Control 
            admitted they had wildly overstated obesity deaths. To add insult to 
            injury, that new study found that people who are modestly 
            overweight actually have a lower risk of death than those of normal 
            weight, according to the Associated Press.
     All of this is big news to anyone who has been watching 
            the major media cover food issues and Americas obesity epidemic 
            for the last year. For a year, the media have been highlighting the 
            issue of obesity and the numerous risks it poses to Americas 
            health.
     The biggest news, of course, was the CDC adjustment. 
            This was the second time in recent months that the CDC had to admit 
            its figures on obesity deaths were inflated. They had previously 
            claimed excess weight caused about 400,000 deaths annually. After 
            that figure was questioned late last year, the CDC reassessed the 
            situation and lowered its estimate to 365,000. The latest study 
            shows that even the adjusted total was about 14 times higher than 
            the roughly 26,000 now believed to be correct.
     The study also pointed out that being overweight isnt 
            even necessarily bad and might even lead to a longer life. According 
            to an April 20, 2005, New York Times article: Now the new study 
            says that obesity and extreme obesity are causing about 112,000 
            extra deaths but that overweight is preventing about 86,000, leaving 
            a net toll of 26,000 deaths compared with 34,000 extra deaths found 
            in those underweight. That means that extremely obese people are 
            still at high risk. But the next riskiest group is actually 
            underweight eaters. People who are only mildly overweight live 
            longer, according to the study.
     Those new numbers arent making the people at the CDC 
            happy. AP added that: CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding said 
            because of the uncertainty in calculating the health effects of 
            being overweight, the CDC is not going to use the brand-new figure 
            of 25,814 in its public awareness campaigns and is not going to 
            scale back its fight against obesity. The story didnt point out 
            that the CDC had no trouble promoting those numbers when it felt 
            they were as high as 400,000.
     The latest study also pointed to flaws in the standard 
            measure of obesity  the Body Mass Index. That calculation is a 
            function of a persons weight and height. The number has long been 
            questioned because it fails to take muscle into account. Athletes 
            typically register as overweight or obese using the BMI  even if 
            they are in excellent shape. Nevertheless, this same measure is the 
            one the government uses to calculate obesity.
     Both the overestimation of obesity deaths and the flaws 
            in the BMI were prominent in two studies on obesity released by the 
            Media Research Centers Business & Media Institute during 2004. While those 
            studies highlighted the anti-industry spin prevalent in many 
            stories, the second study also included covered the two new current 
            problems with obesity science:
Weight loss was thrust into the spotlight by the recent admission that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wildly misstated the impact of obesity on death rates. The CDC had concluded that obesity was responsible for up to 400,000 preventable deaths a year, but inflated that result by tens of thousands because of statistical errors. This is in addition to the ongoing criticism CDC receives for its reliance on the Body Mass Index as a way to determine obesity. The BMI is highly flawed and counts muscular athletes as overweight or obese.
     The CDC staff arent the only ones 
            struggling with the obesity problem. The Department of Agricultures 
            new food pyramid is also stirring the pot. Under the new government 
            dietary guidelines, the old food pyramid is replaced by 12 distinct 
            food pyramids. The new pyramids are intended to be geared toward 
            each individuals needs. 
     On ABCs World News Tonight April 19, 2005, reporter 
            Lisa Stark highlighted anti-industry criticism in her report, 
            pointing out that The pyramid doesnt tell people what foods to 
            avoid, such as those with added sugars. This was exactly the 
            argument of the left-wing Center for Science in the Public Interest 
            and, naturally, that was who Stark talked with next. CSPI Nutrition 
            Policy Director Margo Wootan, a long-time critic of the food 
            industry, immediately launched into her complaint that They dont 
            have the political courage to encourage people to eat less of 
            products that are made by their friends in agribusiness and the food 
            industry.
     Starks report did include a less vitriolic criticism 
            from Dr. Walter Willett from the Harvard School of Public Health who 
            complained that the new pyramid was just overly precise. He added, 
            Its just quite unrealistic.
     To make matters worse, the USDA Web site for the 
            pyramid has been completely overwhelmed and unable to handle the 
            Internet traffic. That site is: 
            
            http://www.mypyramid.gov/
The two Business & Media Institute studies on media coverage of the 
            obesity issue are:
            SUPERSIZED BIAS II
            Big Media Continue Skewing Obesity Debate (May-October 2004)
            
            
            SUPERSIZED BIAS
            Big Medias Role In Covering And Promoting the Obesity Debate